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v2026.1714 entries · CC-BY 4.0
CASRAI

Editorial · CASRAI

Rights Retention Strategy: Authors Keep Rights

How the Rights Retention Strategy lets authors licence their manuscript CC BY and keep reuse rights under Plan S and UKRI mandates.

ByMCP Service
Published 3 Jul 2026· 6 minute read

The Rights Retention Strategy (RRS) is the cOAlition S mechanism that lets an author apply a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to their Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM) — the peer-reviewed, pre-typeset version of a paper — before any publisher copyright agreement is signed. Because the licence exists first, no later publishing contract can strip the author of the right to deposit and reuse that manuscript. It is not itself a route to open access; it is a rights-based safeguard that makes the Green route enforceable even when a publisher’s terms would otherwise block it.

In one sentence: the Rights Retention Strategy is a funder-attached licensing condition, applied at the point of grant award, requiring a CC BY licence on the AAM so that no subsequent publisher agreement can override the author’s right to share it openly.

What Is the Rights Retention Strategy?

cOAlition S developed the Rights Retention Strategy and announced it on 15 July 2020, designed to ensure that scholarly publications arising from funded research could be made open access regardless of a publisher’s self-archiving embargo. Under the RRS, a cOAlition S funder’s grant conditions require that a CC BY licence is applied to the AAM before submission to a journal — the licence is a condition of the funding, not a request made to the publisher.

Authors signal this by adding a rights retention statement to the manuscript’s acknowledgements section and cover letter at submission, typically worded along the lines of: “For the purposes of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.” This statement puts the publisher on notice before any copyright transfer agreement (CTA) is discussed, which is the legal mechanism that prevents a later CTA from overriding it.

How Does Rights Retention Differ from Green and Gold Open Access?

Green OA is a route: an author deposits a manuscript in a repository, often after an embargo the publisher sets. Gold OA is also a route: the publisher makes the version of record open immediately, usually funded by an article processing charge (APC). The Rights Retention Strategy is neither route on its own — it is a rights mechanism that removes the publisher’s ability to impose an embargo or demand exclusive rights over the AAM, which in practice enables no-embargo Green OA without requiring an APC.

Mechanism When rights are secured Licence applied Embargo Typical cost to author
Rights Retention Strategy At grant award, before submission CC BY on the AAM None None
Green OA (standard) At deposit, after publication Publisher-defined, often more restrictive Often 6–24 months None
Gold OA At publication Usually CC BY on the version of record None Article processing charge

The practical distinction matters for compliance: an author can satisfy a funder’s immediate-CC-BY requirement through Rights Retention without paying an APC, which is why cOAlition S built the strategy — to decouple open access compliance from publisher paywalls and Gold OA pricing.

What Do UKRI, cOAlition S and REF Require of Authors?

UKRI’s open access policy, in effect from 1 April 2022, requires that in-scope peer-reviewed research articles be made immediately open access on publication, via the version of record or the AAM under a CC BY licence, with no embargo permitted. Rights Retention is the mechanism many UK institutions use to guarantee this for the AAM route when a journal will not offer immediate Gold OA on acceptable terms.

Several UK universities embedded Rights Retention into institutional policy well ahead of REF deadlines: the University of Edinburgh introduced it in April 2022, the University of Cambridge in May 2022, and the University of St Andrews in December 2022, with the N8 Research Partnership universities committing to similar statements. King’s College London instituted its Rights Retention Strategy through a revised Research Publications Policy effective 1 March 2023, explicitly framed around meeting both funder and future REF eligibility requirements. Institutional rights retention is not a new idea — Harvard University adopted the first version of this approach in 2008, more than a decade before Plan S formalised it for European and UK funders.

  • Check whether your funder is a cOAlition S signatory or a UKRI council with an equivalent CC BY mandate.
  • Add the rights retention statement to your manuscript’s acknowledgements and cover letter at submission, not after acceptance.
  • Deposit the AAM in your institutional repository on acceptance, without waiting for an embargo to expire.
  • Keep a record of the statement and deposit date for REF output-eligibility evidence.

Authors publishing multi-author, multi-funder papers should note that the corresponding author typically applies the statement on behalf of all co-authors when negotiating with the journal — clear, attributed authorship records make this easier to evidence, which is why institutions increasingly pair rights retention guidance with structured authorship documentation.

Common Questions About Rights Retention

What is the Rights Retention Strategy?

The Rights Retention Strategy is cOAlition S’s mechanism requiring a CC BY licence on the Author Accepted Manuscript, applied as a funder grant condition before journal submission. It guarantees immediate, embargo-free open access to the peer-reviewed manuscript without requiring an article processing charge or publisher permission.

What does it mean to retain rights under Plan S?

Retaining rights means the author keeps sufficient non-exclusive rights over the AAM to deposit, share and licence it for reuse, even after signing a publisher’s copyright transfer agreement. The CC BY licence takes legal precedence because it was applied before that agreement existed.

What is the Rights Retention Strategy statement wording?

Institutions use variants of a standard sentence: the author has applied a CC BY licence to the AAM “for the purposes of open access,” included in the submission cover letter and manuscript acknowledgements. Several UK universities, including Edinburgh, publish translated versions of this exact statement for international co-authors.

How do authors notify a publisher under the Rights Retention Strategy?

Authors notify publishers by inserting the rights retention statement into the manuscript submission itself — typically the cover letter and acknowledgements — rather than negotiating separately. This creates a documented, timestamped notice that the CC BY licence predates any subsequent copyright transfer agreement.

What This Means for Institutions and the Next REF

For research administrators, Rights Retention converts open access compliance from a publisher-dependent negotiation into an institution-controlled process: the licence is secured at the point of funding, not the point of publication, so compliance no longer hinges on which journal an author chooses. This matters directly for REF output eligibility, where a documented deposit and licence trail is the evidence assessors and funders will check.

Some publishers have pushed back against Rights Retention Strategy statements, occasionally asking authors to remove them or delaying decisions, though institutions with published policies — from Harvard onward — report continued publication success across their author base. As more UK institutions and cOAlition S funders align on CC BY-by-default AAM licensing, expect the strategy to become the default compliance route wherever Gold OA APCs are unaffordable or unavailable, with research administrators increasingly tracking deposit and licence records through structured research administration systems rather than manual follow-up.

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Referenced across the research world

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